Tools and policy frameworks are only as good as the people who implement and support them. Automated mechanisms can only go so far before they rely on human intelligence to drive the appropriate reaction. The controls required by security frameworks and the data they generate, however, are overwhelming, and finding the right security talent can feel impossible.

Organizations often choose to prioritize the implementation of their security program components on the basis of risk. By identifying potential impacts and attack vectors, it’s easier to identify the controls that produce the biggest return on investment. Training your staff to understand what they see when they see it, and how to respond proactively, will help you build a security organization that is resilient in the face of evolving threats and identify any controls gaps you have while you execute your security roadmap.
This webinar will talk about how organizations can evolve beyond the compliance checklist and overwhelming scanner results by employing threat simulations. We will discuss how threat simulations differ from penetration testing, how they can be used to help make your organization stronger, and how they can replace traditional penetration testing as part of a security program.

We will focus on a discussion of attack chains, mapping methodologies to real world threats, and then look at a sample attack to see how a nominally compliant system can still be compromised.

Since data breaches have increasingly become more commonplace, it seems reasonable that the lessons learned from each incident would find their way into the defensive strategies of non-impacted organizations the world over. The truth is, while a large portion of this information is publically available, organizations are still suffering from the same poor IT hygiene that has plagued the industry for years. Why is that the case?

Join Moderator Chris Pogue, SVP, Nuix Cyber Threat Analysis Team, and a panel of security experts from Nuix, Kroll, Wilson Elser, and the United States Secret Service as they discuss their observations from the thousands of breaches they have collectively investigated or litigated, and try to identify the elusive answer to the seemingly simple question, “Why are we not learning our lesson?”.

The protection of your organization's trade secrets, collected PII data, and confidential matters are your top priority. The same is an attractive asset for thousands of hackers around the world looking to profit or gain a competitive advantage that could damage the integrity and success of your organization’s objectives.

In this webinar, join three seasoned cybersecurity experts as they present the trends in cyberespionage and discuss:

• What makes organizations vulnerable to cyberespionage
• Why cyberespionage activity can vary across industries based on hacking drivers
• How a combined security approach that focuses not just on external threat actors but also privileged insiders can help identify spying activity in the enterprise

Corporate data volumes are exploding exponentially, but legal budgets and court imposed deadlines are not keeping pace. It doesn't take Sherlock Holmes to recognize that reducing your time to knowledge can yield big dividends in cost containment and risk mitigation.

We can help you to see the bigger picture and better prepare for strategic project management, meaningful discovery negotiations, and informed proportionality arguments.

Our webinar will show you how you can use common investigative techniques to:

More than one-third of all cybercrime incidents and security breaches are caused by insiders. Insiders have many motivations, including financial, political or emotional. But no matter the reason, insiders inappropriately access an organisation’s critical value data.

Join Keith Lowry, Senior Vice President of the Business Threat Intelligence and Analysis Team at Nuix and Stan Gallo, Director and National Leader of Forensic Technology at KPMG, as they cover:

- The definition of an insider threat
- What organisations are doing wrong in their approach to managing insider threats
- How to design and implement an insider threat program.

The rise in e-commerce data breaches over the past year raises important questions: Why is cardholder data such a big target, how do the bad guys get in and why are we seemingly powerless to stop them?

This session will examine the black market for card data, the three most common attack vectors, and the wrong way to encrypt databases.

You will see real-world examples of malware discovered during investigations and gain insights into the skill sets of each attacker.

Nuix protects, informs, and empowers society in the knowledge age. Leading organizations around the world turn to Nuix when they need fast, accurate answers for investigation, cybersecurity incident response, insider threats, litigation, regulation, privacy, risk management, and other essential challenges.

Nuix makes small work of big data volumes and complex file formats. Our solutions combine advanced technology with the extensive knowledge of our global team of industry experts. We bring data to life with clarity and intelligence to solve critical business problems, reduce crime, and secure and manage information.